GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN dance floor. Quintero's superb Latinos and Charles Turecamo's cheery orchestra are their guides Closed Sundays. WALDORF-AsTORIA, Park Ave at 49th St. (EL 5- 3000 )-Ray Hartley'" concise yet convivial piano gets a \vorkout in Peacock Alley from cocktail time until eight or nine during the week, from five to eleven on Sundays, and not at all on Mondays. A dance quartet is on the stand from nine until one every night but Sunday. NOTE-ROSELAND DANCE CITY, 239 W. 52nd St. (CI 7-0200)- The largest single portion of Inner Space in the whole city, and occupied by seri- ous, non-Twist dancers. They are fringed by two ceaseless bands, one N orte and one Sud, which tee off at about even-thirty during the week and stay put until around one; Sundays they start off at three-thirty For insatiables, there are Thursday and Saturday matinée from one-thirty to six, and a floor sho\ ' at eleven every Tuesday. Closed Mondays. SMALL AND BOUNCY (Dining but no dancing except as noted.) GOLDIE'S NEW YORK, 244 E. 53rd St. (PL 9-7 2 45): Youth springs eternal, and so do the pianos of Sam Hamilton (who does the cocktail hour) and of Wayne Sanders and Goldie Hawkins himself, who do solo flights during the evening, then up-and-coming !andelTI music after the theatre. Older fanCIers of eat-drink-and-be-merry are also alIo\ved in. Closed Sundays.... IN BOBOLl, ISO I Second A ve., at 82nd St (TR 9-3777): When in Florence do as the Florentines do, \\Thich means bits and pieces of Italianate opera. Thursday through Saturday each week, there is languorous dance music, too Closed Mon- days. . . . FREY'S, 160 E. 64th St. (TE 8- I 5.24 : The population of the smalI bar-and-gnll IS scions of our time , whose sibling rivalry is concerned solely \vith who can bring along the neatest young lady. Carl Norman's piano sounds the responsive chords. The hours run late; Sundays are the music-maker's holidays . . . MIKE MALKAN'S, 340 E. 79th St (RE 4- 3 000 ): Another youth convocation-girls who are to the manor born (Briarcliff and such) and boys with equal accreditation, all chattering even when Mr. Malkan sits do\vn to a very hearty piano, which he does every night from seven until milk-route time. .. JAMAICA ARMS, 13 I 5 Second Ave., at 69th St. (YlJ 8-5850) : The right little, tight little is- land at its evening's ea e, through which an island wandering minstrel parades from eight until two Thursdays through Saturdays, from seven until eleven Sundays, and from nine to one Mondays through Wednesdays. . . . BELL'S, 314 E. 70th St (UN 1-1419)' One more neighborhood pub. What the boys and girls in the back room will have i the triu of George Taylor-none of it insistent, al] of it cheer- ful, every night but Sunday.... CHARLIE BATES, 1487 First Ave., at 78th St (734- 9777): ...\nd stilI another neighborhood pub, aimed at looking and sounding 1900. Bob Emma, prancing on a tin-pan upright, takes care of the 1900 sound; All the King's Men, folk singers date a bit later. Sundays, on the other hand, there are four-to-one sessions by the Smith Street Jazz Society Banel.... CHUCKS' COMPOSITE, 303 E. 53rd St. (EL 5- 8825): The junior grades of show business and the neIghboring arts have their after- hours here. Sort of cookout are the aura and the diet, and the pirit of the good life is enhanced ever) night but Sunday by Cecil Young's three-man exposition of futurism in music. . . . LA CHANSONNETTE, 890 Second Ave, at 47th St. (PL 2-7320): The operator of this tiny niche, Rita Dimitri, who is Naughty Marietta to the life. does her great-gusto nights-in-Paris arias at dinner weeknights, at both dinner and supper Fridays and Satur- days. Statel) dance music begins at eight. Closed Sundays. . . . CHARDAS, 307 E. 79th St. (RH 4-9382): Oh, those lovely lost years in Mitteleuropa! Among the worshippers are tenors (especially the noble old-school Tibor Rako sy).. soprano , violins, zimbalon, and whatever. Worshippers who wish to dance have Bela Babai's band at their toes. Closed Mondays. .. WAVERLY LOUNGE, 103 Waverly PI. (AL 4-0776): Laurie Brewis, who has manned one piano for the past ten years, i '\ the definitely permanent party in the rumbus- tious corner-saloon lounge of the Hotel Earle, where he devotes his time-after nine- thirty every e\ ening but Monday-to the con- sideration of the worthiest tunes and ly rics of our day and yesterday. . . . ASTI, 13 E. [2th St. (AL 5-9773): Seldum, if ever, have o many Rodolfos and Scarpias assembled under cover of night disguised as plain, ordinary waiters Closed Mondays. . . . THE APARTMENT. 1068 Sec- ond Ave., at 56th St. (PL 3-7923) : Explorers of the piano bars in this part of town are much better off here, \vhere Charles De Forest, from ten until three every night but Sunday, sings (to his o\Vn accompaniment) about the \vays and \viles of guys and dolIs. NOTE-The discothèque, a fonn of undulant fever for \vhich time is the only cure, can best be viewed by viewers-with-alarm if they frequent these establishments: SHEPHEARD'S, in the Drake Hotel, Park Ave. at 56th St. (HA 1-0181): If only the Sphinxes \vho decorate this Cairo caravansary could talk, \vhat \\.ould they say of our Park A venue folk dances? The music is issued by LB.M. \\..hich runs from seven-thirty to three or four during the \veek and fronl seven-thirty until one on Sundays. Dinner and supper. . . . ARTHUR, 154 E. 54th St. (688-4420): The art of the ad-lib solo dance (by, naturalIy, people who don't need people) i'\ brought to fever heat and left there. ( Y 011, will prob- ably be left outside if you haven't a reserva- tion.) The music of distant and unearthly spheres is interspersed with music by mere earthmen. Nine-thirty or ten until four is the running time; a fair number of dinner dishes are in evidence. Closed Mondays. . . . IL MIO, in Delmonico's Hotel, 65 E. 59th St. (EL 5-2500): The music is from a speak- ing tube, the hours are nine until all-fall- do\vn every night but Monday, the menu is minimal, the moving spirit is Tanya Everett (of "Fiddler on the Roof"), who dances like the wind The costumes run from theatre \vorking clothes to underground movies. . . . DOWNTOWN, I Sheridan Sq. (AL 5-1050): A den of propinquity, not very ornate but ex- tremely cheerful, where the evolutions of the neatly but amusingly dressed house dancers are little masterpieces of \vile and \V it. A vestigial kitchen exists. Nine-thirty to three or four is par for this course; there are one- to-six Saturday and Sunday matinées. Closed Mondays. SMALL AND SERENE (Dining but no dancing, except as noted.) DRAKE ROOM, 71 E. 56th St. (HA [-0900): One part pomp one part circumstance, one part Cy Walter, playing piano that is brisk and buoyant and never, never fancy-Dan. He's there during cocktails, dinner, and supper. Closed Sundays. . . . SHERATON-EAST, Park Ave. at 51st St. (PL 5-1000): A panoply of panel- ling (hearts of oak) makes the Café An1bas- sador over into a stately home of England. The pianist- Joe Moon, a \vell-versed poet -is on a tour of duty that runs from seven to one every night but Sunday.... (jJ Seven-to- ten dinner \\ ould be the children's hour in Vienna, frOtTI vvhich this hotel's Le Palais de- rives, but the re'\taurant is an excellent repli- ca in other respects. Hans Hansberg's zither gOe'; with it. Clo ed Sundays. . . . CHÂTEAU HEN- RI IV, 37 E. 64th St. (RE 7-8818) : It is impos- sible to cast out the moat that is in the eye of the beholder, for it is an integral part of the toy castle that serves as a sounding board for the violin of Norbert Faconi, the president etneritus of alI perambulating musicians. No music Sundays. . . . KING HENRI IV, 142 E. 53rd St. (PL 2-5566): Another of the King's retreats, likevÚse a spoof of medieval obj ec- tive art. George Cardini circumnavigates it with his viva-voce fiddle. No music Sundays. .. ROMA DI NOTTE, 1528 Second Ave., at 79th St. (RE 4-3443): Romulus and Remus slept here, and gave the chef their favorite rec- ipes. The musicians, \vhose curriculum runs from seven-thirty until t\vo, are old Romans, too Closed Sundays. . . . CAFÉ RENAISSANCE 48, IS E. 48th St. (HA 1-3448): 1fourners for the lost Spanish Pavilion at the World's Fair should find solace in this array of Iberian decur. A guitar (Rogelio Reguera) eh\..ells from eight until one upon the delights and the deliriums of Latin passion. Closed Sun- days. . . . CAFÉ RENAISSANCE 49, 338 E. 49th St. (PL 1-3160): The dining room, one of our best antique shop", is a vivacious setting for the Lusitanian lanlents of a guitar (Harold Morris) that holds forth from eight to one. No sound effects Sundays. On Monday, Feb. 21, Mr. Morris \vill give \\a) to Sarita He- 7 Exclusive 4 ---- \J Petite Parisienne ...or, at least that's the effect given by this young ensemble, one from our exclusive collection of <<Petite Virginie" clothes. De- signed in France by the young Parisian, Virginie, they're made here for the young Americans who aspire to a couture look early in life. This, a. two piece jacket dress in striped- cotton denim with freshenings of vanilla trim. Red-and-vanilla stripes or grey- and-vanilla stripes. Sizes 7 to 14, $15. On mail or phone orders, add 55 fÍ beyond our deli very area. Sixth Floor ON THE PLAZA . NEW YORK BERGDORf GCÐDMAN 5TH AVENUE AT 58TH STREET